Heide Klumpp, PhD

Assistant Professor

Dr. Klumpp’s primary research interest is brain pathophysiology in anxiety and depression in the context of emotion, attention, and cognitive-affective processes for clinical translation. She uses functional magnetic resonance imaging and electroencephalography to delineate brain markers of therapeutic response to psychotherapy to compare with other interventions to evaluate mechanisms of change and to translate discoveries from basic neuroscience into techniques to enhance therapies for internalizing disorders.The overarching goal is to increase therapeutic response with available treatment and develop more individually-tailored, novel interventions.

Interests:

Brain mechanisms of emotion processing and regulation in anxiety and depression Brain markers of treatment response in anxiety and depression Information processing disturbances in internalizing disorders

Affiliations/Memberships:

Society of Biological Psychiatry American Psychological Association Anxiety and Depression Association of America

Projects:

Brain Mechanisms of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Anxiety Disorders and Depression Negative Valence Brain Targets and Predictors of Anxiety and Depression Treatment Sleep Disturbance in Mood Disorders Across the Lifespan